Hehehe.... orang Islam yg protes pembakaran Quran di Florida, ternyata akhirnya 
jg ngebakar Quran dlm jumlah yg lebih banyak, tentunya sambil melecehkan cewek 
jg dan ngerusak, mungkin sambil ngerampok jg krn yg dibakar itu toko2.

Itulah kehebatan orang Islam, hehehe....

Ngomong2, tau ga siapa yg pertama2 ngebakar Quran? Orang Islam jg, bahkan orang 
Islam yg terbaik, yaitu Usman cs. Ga heran tuh kalo akhirnya si Usman dibantai 
oleh orang Islam.

Ini jg nunjukin kehebatan Islam, hehehe...


http://news.yahoo.com/s/csm/20110414/wl_csm/376907;_ylt=AqcWZbvl6prfOoHR7DZpovKs0NUE;_ylu=X3oDMTNiZHRxYmtoBGFzc2V0A2NzbS8yMDExMDQxNC8zNzY5MDcEY2NvZGUDbW9zdHBvcHVsYXIEY3BvcwM2BHBvcwMzBHB0A2hvbWVfY29rZQRzZWMDeW5faGVhZGxpbmVfbGlzdARzbGsDYWZnaGFubXVsbGFo


Afghan mullahs push peaceful protest in wake of Quran-burning violence

By Tom A. Peter Tom A. Peter  – Thu Apr 14, 9:05 am ET
Kandahar, Afghanistan – As the dust settles in  Afghanistan after sustained 
protest over a Florida pastor's Quran  burning, many residents in Kandahar are 
facing an unpleasant truth: More  Qurans were burned in the course of their 
protests than by Terry Jones. The demonstrations, which started peacefully, 
quickly turned violent,  killing at least nine people and injuring scores in 
Kandahar City alone.  And as protesters vandalized a girls’ school and set fire 
to shops,  Qurans also inadvertently went up in flames. “If they burn a shop, 
there  is a Quran in every shop, so this is a big problem,” says Azizullah  
Aziz, a perfume and soap salesman in Kandahar City. “People don’t know  how to 
protest.”
RELATED: 11 countries speaking out against Quran burning in Florida
On Wednesday, the province’s top spiritual leaders  moved to address the irony 
– 
and promote restraint at a time when  passions are running high over the US war 
effort. They called a shura,  or meeting, and told the crowd of several hundred 
people that gathered  in a tent at Kandahar University how to protest in an 
Islamic manner.
Tooryali Wesa, the governor of Kandahar Province,  says gatherings like this 
are 
important because, after three decades of  war, civic expression is a foreign 
concept for many Afghans.  “Demonstrations and protests are pretty young in the 
country, especially  here in Kandahar. It’s not very usual, so people have to 
be 
educated  about that,” says Mr. Wesa. Inside the tent, the mood was somber.  
Afghans sat cross-legged on carpets laid out over the dirt, receiving  what 
amounted to a stern reprimand. Many looked down and thumbed prayer  beads as 
various speakers shouted into microphones, delivering their  passionate pleas 
for order at future demonstrations.
“One person burned the holy Quran in America. This  was not good, so we came to 
speak out and protest, but unfortunately the  police fired on us because they 
did not know what the protest was  about,” said Maulavi Mohammed Omar, a 
prominent mullah in Kandahar. “Why  did people burn the shops and markets, and 
the holy Quran? That is not  good.”
Seek elders' adviceIslam does not discourage  protests, said the mullahs. But, 
they said, when something happens that  causes concern, citizens must seek the 
advice of their religious leaders  before taking action. They added that any 
protest should also have  clear goals. “You have to respect what the mullahs 
say. If they say  protest, you have to protest. If they say don’t protest, you 
can’t  protest. They know the Islamic law for when to protest,” said Haji  
Rahmudeen, head of the Kandahar Business Association, in his address to  the 
crowd.
The mullahs spoke with Afghan government officials before the meeting, but 
independently organized the event.
In addition to imploring citizens to maintain order  during protests, the 
mullahs called on the government to better prepare  the police to deal with 
protesters, ensure that government and  international forces respect Islamic 
and 
Afghan culture, and stop  international forces from conducting night raids, 
among other demands.  There was much speculation that Wednesday’s event could 
end in yet  another protest. Indeed, all the ingredients were there to stoke 
the  
ever-present well of anger over the ongoing foreign presence. During Mr.  
Omar’s 
speech, he reminded the crowd that America was still the enemy  and its 
soldiers 
are “killing our 2-year-old children in our homes.” At  an Afghan 
demonstration, 
such remarks would normally be met with shouts  from the crowd and calls for 
“Death to America.” But on Wednesday, the  crowd just quietly listened. When 
the 
event ended, few people stayed  even to socialize as the crowd shuffled out of 
the tent, returning to  their cars or bicycles. “We are serious about it. We 
don’t want these  kinds of demonstrations in our province. If people want to 
react to  something, they must do it in a peaceful way,” said Maulavi 
Enayatullah,  a member of the religious scholar’s union in Kandahar city after  
attending Wednesday’s gathering. 

[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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